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dc.contributor.authorLubogo, Isaac Christopher
dc.date.accessioned2022-09-12T22:51:20Z
dc.date.available2022-09-12T22:51:20Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.identifier.citationLubogo, I.C. (2022). The art of oratory in jurisprudence. Kampala: Jescho Publishing Houseen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10570/10784
dc.descriptionThe right of Isaac Christopher Lubogo to be identified as the author of this book has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copy right and Neighboring Rights Act, 2006. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in whole or in part in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.en_US
dc.description.abstractLawyers often speak before adjudicators, city councils, planning commissions, and give talks to civic groups, business executives, or company employees. They even give media interviews on behalf of clients. For certain individuals, it falls into place without any issues. It’s a piece of their characters. In any case, for the individuals who aren’t sure or have stage dread can generally work on speaking and oratory skills. It’s progressively essential to be a viable open speaker if you mean to be a litigator. Judges and juries will anticipate it. Restricting insight will be prepared to jump if you need certainty or on the off chance that you continually slip up when making your contentions in court. It is a highstress condition and you should be agreeable introducing your case as well as having the option to think and react quickly when being tested by your appointed authority. For attorneys, this is significantly increasingly significant. Individuals believe that since you’re a legal counsellor, you’re consequently a dauntless and splendid open speaker. We legal advisors all realize this isn’t in every case valid. This desire, however, is one motivation behind why it’s progressively significant for legal advisors to have great talking abilities than it is for some other experts. As a legal advisor, it’s important that you realize how to convince an adjudicator or council, or address a gathering of professionals, investors, or meeting members. Be that as it may, past this, legal advisors despite everything should be viable communicators in littler gatherings with clients and different lawyers. This isn’t “public speaking” as such. All things considered, the core of the lawful practice is speaking to your customer, and you can’t exclusively do this through the composed word. Regardless of whether you’re a valuebased lawyer, you’ll be aware of your client’s expectations and understand them to different gatherings and lawyers. You’ll have to introduce a certain front regardless of whether you’re feeling apprehensive inside. An analysis about the importance and need of forensic oratory in the training of the future professional of the Law major is presented, since this topic has been poorly included in the teachinglearning process of the Law students. Varied classificatory criteria are suggested in order to enhance a better theoretical systematization for its learning and also for the development of communicative skills. Its objective is the consolidation of a more comprehensive formative process of the students in different law contexts, considering their professional profile at the university. This Book examines representations of courtroom oratory, delivery, and the speaker’s body in medieval rhetorical theory and current practice. It contests the view that medieval theorists paid little attention to judicial oratory and that they largely ignored delivery. After looking at rhetorical treatises, procedural manuals, guides to legal deportment, satiric portraits of the lawyerasrobedvulture (etc.), the Book turns to the work of four rhetorical theorists who rewrite (and upend) ancient rhetorical theory: Alcuin of York, Boncompagno da Signa, Guilhem Molinier, and Jean de Jandun. Each offers an animated account of embodied legal expression, a richly detailed evocation of the medieval courtroom, and a distinctive theory of the pleader’s body. In their work, law appears not as a set of rules or the sovereign’s fiat but as visceral, intimate bodily experience. Here, the body may appear as a divine instrument. Or, alternatively, it may appear as a material thing with a life of its own: indecorous, prone to accident, hopelessly leaky, sublimely obscene.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherJescho Publishing Houseen_US
dc.subjectOratoryen_US
dc.subjectJurisprudenceen_US
dc.titleThe art of oratory in jurisprudenceen_US
dc.title.alternativeThe Articulate Attorney at Lawen_US
dc.typeBooken_US


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